lay his charm it is not easy now to say; but his gentle
good-nature and his utter helplessness seems to have
appealed to those of sterner mould. The extracts
already given from Pope’s correspondence show
the affection with which he was inspired for his brother
of the pen. Pope took him so completely under
his massive wing that he remarked later, “they
would call him one of my eleves."[5] Pope accepted
the position, and introduced him to his circle.
He made him known to Swift, and that great man loved
him as he loved no other man; and to Parnell, Arbuthnot,
Ford—the “joyous Ford” of “Mr.
Pope’s Welcome from Greece”—and
Bolingbroke, in all of whom he inspired an affection,
which endured through life. Parnell and Pope
wrote jointly to him, and while in 1714 Pope was still
addressing him as “Dear Mr. Gay,” Parnell
had already thrown aside all formality and greeted
him as “Dear Gay.” His old schoolfellow,
William Fortescue, cleaved to him, and they were in
such constant communication that when Pope wanted
to see Fortescue, it was to Gay he appealed to arrange
a meeting. The terms on which Gay was with the
set is shown in Pope’s letter to him, written
from Binfield, May 4th, 1714: “Pray give,
with the utmost fidelity and esteem, my hearty service
to the Dean, Dr. Arbuthnot, Mr. Ford, and to Mr. Fortescue.
Let them also know at Button’s that I am mindful
of them."[6] Erasmus Lewis Gay knew now, and Caryll
too, and the rest of the small literary set, who, with
gusto, made him welcome among them. Indeed, when
the “Memoirs of Scriblerus” were in contemplation,
and, indeed, begun in 1713, Gay, then comparatively
unknown, was invited to take a hand in the composition
with the greatest men of the day. “The design
of the Memoirs of Scriblerus was to have ridiculed
all the false tastes in learning, under a character
of a man of capacity enough, that had dipped into every
art and science, but injudiciously in each,”
we have been told. “It was begun by a club
of some of the greatest wits of the age. Lord
Oxford, the Bishop of Rochester, Mr. Pope, Congreve,
Arbuthnot, Swift, and others. Gay often held
the pen; and Addison liked it well enough, and was
not disinclined to come in to it."[7] It does not transpire
whether Gay had at this time met Swift, but that soon
after they were in correspondence, appears from a
letter from Pope to Swift, June 18th, 1714: “I
shall translate Homer by the by. Mr. Gay has acquainted
you with what progress I have made in it. I cannot
name Mr. Gay without all the acknowledgments which
I shall owe you, on his account."[8]
[Footnote 1: Hill: Works (ed. 1754), I, p. 325.]
[Footnote 2: Pope: Works (ed. Elwin and Courthope), VII, p. 409.]
[Footnote 3: Pope: Works (ed. Elwin and Courthope), VII, p. 412.]
[Footnote 4: Johnson: Lives of the Poets (ed. Hill), III, p. 268.]
[Footnote 5: Spence: Anecdotes (ed. Singer), p. 145.]